Rosie the Riveter National History Site – California
Rosie the Riveter National Historical Park was another place I visited during our time teaching in California. This one I did on my own, getting there early when it first opened.

Located in Richmond, California, along the San Francisco Bay, the park captures the extraordinary war mobilization that transformed this shipbuilding town almost overnight during World War II. The Kaiser Shipyards have operated around the clock, producing Liberty and Victory ships at record speed. Entire neighborhoods, childcare centers, hospitals and transportation systems sprang up to support the workforce/
When men left for military service, women stepped into factories, shipyards and industrial plants in unprecedented numbers. They welded hulls and operated heavy machinery. “Rosie the Riveter” became the symbol of strength and resilience. Here, you see the real faces behind that icon. These were mothers, daughters, teachers and homemakers who adapted almost overnight to skilled industrial labor.

Rosie the Riveter/World War II Home Front National Historical Park was officially established as a unit of the National Park System in 2000. It was signed into law by Bill Clinton.
The creation of the park was the result of years of local advocacy in Richmond, California. Community leaders and former shipyard workers worked to preserve the story of the Kaiser Shipyards and the massive home front mobilization that took place there during World War II.
This park stands today not just as a memorial to “Rosie” but to a chapter in U.S. history when an entire community, and nation, reorganized itself during wartime.
Read More From Nancy
Tuzigoot National Monument – Arizona
Rising above the Verde Valley in Central Arizona, Tuzigoot National Monument is one of those places where the land and the past feel inseparable. Tuzigoot preserves the remains of a large prehistoric settlement constructed by the Sinagua people, who lived in this region between the 1100s and early 1400s. Over time, what began as a smaller cluster of […]
Mount Rainier National Park – Washington
Mount Rainier rises more than 14,000 feet above the surrounding forests and valleys. Mount Rainier dominates the horizon. Its snow-covered summit is visible from miles away. Mount Rainier is a massive stratovolcano and the most heavily glaciated peak in the contiguous United States. These glaciers feed rivers that shape western Washington and sustain ecosystems, agriculture and […]
The Touro Synagogue in Newport – Rhode Island
The Touro Synagogue in Newport, Rhode Island, stands as the oldest surviving synagogue in the United States and a powerful symbol of religious freedom in the nation. Completed in 1763 for a community of Sephardic Jews as a place where their faith could be practiced openly and without fear. Many in this Jewish community had fled the Inquisition […]